articleAmerican Economic ReviewApr 1, 2005Closed access

The Economics of Governance

University of California, Berkeley

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Abstract

The economics of governance is an effort to implement the “study of good order and workable arrangements,” where good order includes both spontaneous order in the market, which is a venerated tradition in economics (Adam Smith, 1776; Friedrich Hayek, 1945; Kenneth A. Arrow and Gerard Debreu, 1954), and intentional order, of a “conscious, deliberate, purposeful” kind (Chester Irving Barnard, 1938 p. 9). Also, I interpret workable arrangements to mean feasible modes of organization, all of which are flawed in comparison with a hypothetical ideal (Avinash Dixit, 1996 pp. 4–9). The object is to work out the efficiency logic for managing transactions by alternative modes of governance—principally spot markets,…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Economics
  • Corporate governance
  • Neoclassical economics
  • Public economics
  • Positive economics
  • Finance
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